Hailing from Taunton, Massacheusetts – South of Boston – the three
piece
band Wheat formed in 1997 and released their first two albums on the
Chicago-based independent label Sugarfree. Wheat is made up of
singer/guitarist Scott Levesque, drummer Brendan Harney and guitarist Ricky
Brennan.

The soundtrack to the Civil War film Cold Mountain is a collection of old-timey traditional country, folk, blues and gospel music in the same vein as the soundtrack to O Brother Where Art Thou. Produced by the extraordinary T-Bone Burnett whose work as producer of 'O Brother' has equal import to his work with Counting Crows, Wallflowers and other pop bands, Cold Mountain is a slightly darker, more bucolic first cousin to O Brother.

Sweetheart is an excellent collection of covers of love songs featuring many favorite XPN artists. Recorded especially for this collection, it includes a
mix of classic love songs and more recent tunes.

The Scottish indie-pop band Belle & Sebastian have been critic’s
darlings and since the mid-Nineties have released a handful of adventurous,
whimsical albums influenced by folk-rock and 60’s pop. Led
by guitarist and vocalist Stuart Murdoch, roots of Belle & Sebastian’s
“twee-pop” can be traced back to the jangly-pop punk of
The Smiths, The Go-Betweens, Orange Juice, and the enigmatic British
singer/songwriter Felt. Today, Belle & Sebastian’s colleagues
include bands like Stereolab, the High Llamas, Elliot Smith (RIP),
even Nashville’s eccentric Lambchop.

Beneath These Fireworks is singer-songwriter Matt Nathanson’s sixth album in ten years. Born in Massachusetts and based in San Francisco, Nathanson has built a loyal
and impassioned grassroots following over the last few years.

Comparisons to John Mayer, Howie Day and Jason Mraz notwithstanding, Nathanson has his own completely unique musical identity
that includes a live show that literally has him taking unsuspecting audiences by storm. He knows how to entertain, and his performances take his recorded songs to a completely
intense level.

Every year around the December holiday time, it seems that almost every musician releases a Christmas album or single. Some have stood the test of time, others seem like a commercial cash-in on the emotions and meaning of the holidays.

If there’s ever a band moved by the true spirit of Christmas, it is the Blind Boys of Alabama – one of the greatest gospel groups of our time.

After his reign of the R&B and pop charts in the 70’s
with classics like “I’m Still In Love With You,” “Let’s
Stay Together,” “Tired of Being Alone,” and “Here
I Am,” Al Green decided to join the ministry and by the
1980’s was only releasing Gospel records and has been primarily
been a religious performer since then.

David Dye, host of the World Cafe says it best: "This
is the best World Cafe CD yet." And on the CD, David
and the World Cafe staff present 17 of the most incredible
live performances recorded exclusively for the national syndicated show. Train, Steve
Winwood, Phil Roy, Daniel Lanois, Ben Harper, Los Lonely Boys,
John Eddie, Alexi Murdoch, Rosanne Cash, Joe Jackson, Pete Yorn,
Amy Rigby, Azam Ali, Damien Rice, Mark Knopfler, Richard Thompson
and Ziggy Marley make the all-star cut on this all-star edition,
Three Flights Up.

When Ryan Adams’ first band Whiskeytown debuted in the mid-Nineties
they were one of the few “alt-country” bands that critics
and fans of the genre felt could break through to mainstream success.
Truth is however, while Whiskeytown was a critical success, creatively
that had as much to do with “country” music as the Eagles
did during their prime. If anything, Adams established himself
as an excellent songwriter with a variety of influences, country
music being just one of them.